How much does your double latte cost, in human terms? Go inside the movement for fair trade coffee.
A revolutionary in Peru takes over the Japanese ambassador’s home to free his wife.
When the ANC won power in South Africa, they had to govern alongside their oppressors.
In Iran, there is a thriving trade in kidneys, which poor people line up to sell at less than $3,000.
In the strict Islamic nation of Iran, it is legal to be transsexual but not gay.
An attorney and a torture survivor track the former dictator of Chad who terrorized his countrymen for a decade.
As Israel disengages from the Gaza Strip, democracy is pitted against social and political turmoil.
Families of those killed under dictator Spanish General Francisco Franco search for answers.
Visit a place where Russian nationalists learn to hate democracy, love God, and fire weapons.
Dirt is the living skin of the Earth. So why do we treat it like, well ... dirt?
“Our wealth is imaginary. It comes from soil.”
“The first thing I do is I put my hand in the ground and I eat it.”
“God made dirt, dirt don’t hurt, put it in your mouth and let it work.”
A look at industrial gold-mining in two remote locations, Borneo and Guinea.
Two female lawyers in Cameroon are helping the Muslim women in their village fight against abuse.
The role of Cuban revolutionaries in the people's struggles in Africa.
Three women work to assure the legitimacy of Egypt's recent multiparty elections.
Meet three young boxers from Bukom, Ghana, a town with a unique boxing culture.
“Love thy neighbor” is easier said than done.
The Parish prepares for Christmas midnight Mass.
The racial divide in Lawrence extends even to the homeless.
Sometimes racial tension boils over into violence.
A Kurdish refugee returns to his homeland to make peace with the past.
Decades after leaving, a filmmaker returns to chronicle life along the Chinese-North Korean border.
This is the film retailers and brands in the West don't want you to see.
Arab and Jewish children learn together as their school attempts a binational and bilingual program.
Chahinaz, an Algerian student, begins to wonder what life is like for other Muslim women worldwide.
Hannah Senesh was the World War II-era poet and diarist who became a and modern-day Joan of Arc.
Project Kashmir tests a friendship in one of the most dangerous and beautiful places on earth.
“Religion had been used to divide the people, and then divide the land.”